Published on 01 January 2022

Podocyturia in Fabry disease

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Pereira, Ester Miranda;Silva, Adalberto Socorro da;Labilloy, Anatália;Monte Neto, José Tiburcio do;Monte, Semiramis Jamil Hadad do

Description

Abstract Introduction: Fabry disease is a lysosomal storage disorder due to abnormalities in the GLA gene (Xq22). Such changes result in the reduction/absence of activity of the lysosome enzyme α-GAL, whose function is to metabolize globotriaosylceramide (Gb3). Renal disease is a major clinical outcome of the accumulation of Gb3. Podocyte injury is thought to be a major contributor to the progressive loss of the renal function and may be found altered even before the onset of microalbuminuria. Objective: The aim of this study was to quantify the urinary excretion of podocytes in Fabry disease patients (V269M, n = 14) and healthy controls (n = 40), and to correlate podocyturia with the variables gender, age, time of therapy and albumin: creatinine ratio (ACR). Methods: Urinary podocytes were stained using immunofluorescence to podocalyxin and DAPi. The number of podocalyxin-positive cells was quantified and the average number was taken (normal range 0-0.6 podocytes/mL). Results: The average number of podocytes in the urine of Fabry disease patients was significantly higher than in healthy controls (p < 0.0001). We observed a positive correlation between podocyturia and ACR (p = 0.004; (r2 = 0.6417). We found no correlation between podocyturia and gender, age or duration of therapy. Conclusion: Podocyturia is an important parameter in the assessment of renal disease in general, and it may serve as an additional early tool for monitoring Fabry disease nephropathy even before changes in ACR are seen. This may prove to be a useful tool to assess disease progression in patients expected to have a more aggressive phenotype.

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Metrics

Dataset Index

0.3

FAIR Score

13%

Citations

0

Mentions

0

Metrics Over Time

Publication Details

DOI

Publisher

SciELO journals

Assigned Domain

Subfield

Nephrology

Field

Medicine

Domain

Health Sciences

Confidence Score

52%

Source

Scholar Data Model

Keywords

110312 Nephrology and UrologyFOS: Clinical medicine

Normalization Factors

FT

13.46

CTw

1.00

MTw

1.00